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Peter Cheeseman
Peter Cheeseman
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Peter Barrie Cheeseman, CBE (27 January 1932, Cowplain, Hampshire[1] – 27 April 2010, Stoke-on-Trent)[2][3] was a British theatre director who is credited with having pioneered "theatre in the round".[4]

Key Information

Early life

[edit]

His father's work as a Naval Communications Officer took him and his young family to many locations around England, and Peter was educated at ten schools (of which the last was Quarry Bank High School in Liverpool) before attending Sheffield University (1952) where he graduated in 1955 with a degree in English, Latin and Modern History.[5]

Cheesman started his theatre work while he was in the RAF, and did some directing at university (including an "ambitious" production of King Lear).[6]

Career

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After involvement with the left-wing Unity Theatre in Liverpool and work at Derby Playhouse Cheeseman joined Stephen Joseph's peripatetic Studio Theatre (in the round) which was then based in Scarborough.[5] In 1962, Joseph and Cheeseman gained the use of a former cinema in Hartshill, Stoke-on-Trent, and converted it into the Victoria Theatre, a square playing space where the audience viewed the performance from all four sides.

Cheeseman became the sole artistic director for the following 36 years. In that time he produced new plays from such writers as Peter Terson and Alan Ayckbourn, using young acting talent such as Ben Kingsley.[7] He was responsible for over 140 productions, old and new. A speciality was plays with a local resonance, such as The Knotty, about the North Staffordshire Railway, and The Fight for Shelton Bar, about the closure of a local steelworks. [citation needed]

Cheeseman masterminded the move in 1986 to a new purpose-built building, specifically designed for theatre in the round, the New Vic Theatre in nearby Newcastle-under-Lyme. He finally retired in 1998, and in that year was appointed a CBE.[7] In retirement he remained active, spending eight years as Chair of the National Council for Drama Training. In 2009 he was recipient of the Young Vic Award for a lifetime's encouragement and inspiration to a younger generation of theatre artists.[7]

Mike Leigh, who was involved with the Victoria Theatre in the 1960s,[8] said

"Working with Peter was a special and creative time. Great friendships were made. There was something special about what Peter made people do and made people be. The kind of spirit in which we worked, to be political and truthful, was down to Peter. He is a genius, a vagabond, a facilitator. What he has achieved is colossal and he is regarded with great respect and love."

Death and legacy

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Peter Cheeseman died on 27 April 2010 of inanition and vascular dementia,[9] after a long battle with Parkinson's disease.[3]

Staffordshire University inaugurated the annual Peter Cheeseman Lectures. His work is now regarded as a suitable topic for academic study.[10]

References

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from Grokipedia
Peter Cheeseman was a British theatre director renowned for pioneering theatre-in-the-round in regional theatre and for his long leadership of a community-rooted repertory company in North Staffordshire. Born in Portsmouth in 1932, he died in 2010 at the age of 78. Cheeseman served as the founding artistic director of the Victoria Theatre in Stoke-on-Trent from its opening in 1962 until his retirement in 1998, establishing the venue as the United Kingdom's first permanent theatre-in-the-round and building an international reputation for innovative verbatim musical documentaries that explored local history, industries, and social issues in the Potteries region. He later oversaw the company's relocation to the purpose-built New Vic Theatre in Newcastle-under-Lyme, which opened in 1986 as Europe's first such venue. His distinctive body of work included productions such as The Jolly Potters (1964), The Knotty (1966), and Fight for Shelton Bar! (1974), which combined documentary material with music to reflect community experiences and concerns. Through his emphasis on a resident ensemble of actors, writers, musicians, and designers deeply engaged with the local area, Cheeseman provided early opportunities for figures including Alan Ayckbourn, Peter Terson, Bob Hoskins, and Ben Kingsley, while fostering a model of theatre closely tied to its audience's lives. He was appointed CBE in 1998 for services to drama.

Early life and education

Childhood and family background

Peter Barrie Cheeseman was born on 27 January 1932 in Cowplain, a small Hampshire village on the outskirts of Portsmouth. His father, Eric Raymond Cheeseman, worked as a naval wireless operator and later as a civil servant for the Air Ministry. His mother, Gladys Cheeseman (née Hugill), was a theatre enthusiast who chose her son's middle name Barrie as a tribute to J. M. Barrie, the author of Peter Pan. Cheeseman's childhood was marked by frequent relocations due to his father's career, which required the family to move to various locations across England. This resulted in him attending ten different schools during his early years. His secondary education concluded at Quarry Bank High School in Liverpool, where the family home was located in Speke from around 1948 to the mid-1950s. His energetic mother involved him in amateur dramatics, providing an early exposure to theatre.

University studies and early theatre experience

Peter Cheeseman attended the University of Sheffield from 1952 to 1955, where he earned a degree in English, Latin, and Modern History. During his time at university, he was actively involved in theatre and directed several plays, including an ambitious production of King Lear. Following graduation, Cheeseman undertook a three-year short service commission in the RAF Educational Service. He continued his engagement with theatre during this period, teaching Shakespeare and fostering dramatic interests among service personnel, such as flight sergeants seeking self-improvement after demobilization. This experience built upon his earlier enthusiasm for the stage, reinforcing his commitment to theatre as an educational and artistic pursuit.

Early career

Work in Liverpool and Derby

Peter Cheeseman's early involvement in theatre took place during his teenage years in Liverpool, where he attended Quarry Bank High School after his family relocated to Merseyside. He participated in drama activities through the Merseyside Workers’ Educational Association and regularly attended productions at the left-leaning Unity Theatre in Liverpool. At Unity Theatre, Cheeseman encountered the Living Newspaper style of documentary presentation, notably a production about Joe Hill that combined factual material with live music and folk song, an approach that profoundly impressed him and later shaped his own theatrical methods. After completing National Service with the RAF, Cheeseman began his professional career at Derby Playhouse in 1959, taking up the position of Assistant Director. There he directed several productions within the traditional weekly repertory system, including plays by Bertolt Brecht and Fernando Arrabal. Cheeseman persuaded the theatre's board to experiment with a two-weekly repertory format to permit longer rehearsal periods. He subsequently advocated for all-day rehearsals, a proposal deemed too radical by management, which led to his resignation.

Collaboration with Stephen Joseph and Studio Theatre

Peter Cheeseman joined Stephen Joseph's Studio Theatre Company in 1961 after meeting Joseph at a theatre conference and responding to an advertisement in The Stage. The company, founded by Joseph in 1955 as the first professional theatre-in-the-round ensemble in Britain, operated peripatetically with summer seasons at the Library Theatre in Scarborough and winter tours to civic halls in theatreless towns, using raked platforms to seat audiences of around 250 surrounding the stage on all sides. Following his varied experience at Derby Playhouse from 1959, where he directed productions and handled front-of-house duties, Cheeseman took on a multifaceted role with Studio Theatre that combined directing—he staged four productions—administrative assistance including tour management and front-of-house responsibilities, and developing plans for the company's future expansion. This immersion in Joseph's pioneering vision of arena performance, which emphasized the actor's centrality and the intimacy of surrounding audiences, profoundly influenced Cheeseman; he later recalled the empty touring space as transmitting "extraordinary potency" and "thrilling potential" that shaped his lifelong dedication to theatre-in-the-round.

Victoria Theatre era

Founding and establishment in Stoke-on-Trent

In 1962, Peter Cheeseman collaborated with Stephen Joseph to convert a former cinema in Hartshill, Stoke-on-Trent, into the Victoria Theatre, marking the establishment of the first permanent theatre-in-the-round in Britain. This followed Cheeseman's involvement with Joseph's Studio Theatre Company starting in 1961, where he directed productions, managed front-of-house operations, and handled tour administration for the company's peripatetic seasons. Cheeseman assumed the position of artistic director at the Victoria Theatre in 1962, later becoming sole artistic director after Stephen Joseph accepted a lectureship at Manchester University and distanced himself from the venture. He remained in this role for the next 36 years, committing to a community-based repertory model with a resident company. From the outset, Cheeseman prioritized building ties with the local community, actively contacting factories, schools, colleges, and other organisations to offer talks and complimentary tickets in order to make the theatre accessible and integral to North Staffordshire life. He described the permanence of the venue as enabling a fuller exploration of the theatre's relationship with the Potteries conurbation and surrounding area, with the intimate nature of theatre-in-the-round serving as a key draw for new audiences through direct human contact between performers and spectators. Annual attendance reflected this approach, rising from 27% of capacity in the first year to 71% by 1974.

Leadership and key developments (1962–1986)

Peter Cheeseman served as artistic director of the Victoria Theatre in Stoke-on-Trent from its opening in 1962 until 1986, a 24-year period at the original venue that formed part of his 36-year commitment to the company from 1962 to 1998. Under his leadership, the theatre evolved into a community-rooted repertory operation with a resident ensemble of professional actors who lived locally and produced work directly informed by engagement with the Potteries area. Cheeseman emphasized actor-centred performance, the development of new writing, and broad accessibility, positioning the theatre as an inclusive public service rather than an elite institution. To foster audience growth and connection, Cheeseman pursued deliberate outreach to factories, schools, colleges, and community organizations, offering talks and complimentary tickets to encourage attendance. These efforts contributed to a steady rise in capacity from 27% in the theatre's first year to 71% by 1974. A defining achievement of this era was Cheeseman's development of musical documentary plays, which drew on local research, verbatim testimony, and folk music to present authentic community stories. Influenced by Charles Parker’s Radio Ballads and Parker's advice to “Listen. Listen to people talking,” this form required every script element to originate from the recorded or documented words of those whose experiences were depicted. The first major example was The Jolly Potters (1964), a collaboratively devised production based on extensive investigation into the pottery industry's history and related events such as the Chartist riots of 1842. This work established the theatre's foundational approach to documentary theatre, blending political engagement, local voices, and musical elements to create performances that reflected and served the surrounding community.

New Vic Theatre era

Relocation to purpose-built venue

In the early 1980s, Peter Cheeseman oversaw a major fundraising campaign to secure a permanent, purpose-built home for the Victoria Theatre Company, which had operated since 1962 in a converted cinema regarded as a temporary venue in Hartshill, Stoke-on-Trent. An appeal launched in 1983 raised more than £1 million, with local residents and businesses contributing almost 90% of the construction costs, reflecting strong community support for the project. After years of site searches and political challenges, the elevated gardens at Stoneyfields in Newcastle-under-Lyme were chosen as the location, a site Cheeseman described as the most beautiful considered following previous disappointments. The New Vic Theatre opened on 13 August 1986 as Europe's first purpose-built theatre-in-the-round, designed specifically to support this staging format and to realize Stephen Joseph's vision that the form would gain legitimacy only through a dedicated permanent structure. Cheeseman masterminded the relocation and the building's realization, creating a visionary venue harmonizing with its woodland setting. He continued as artistic director of the New Vic until his retirement in 1998.

Final years of directorship (1986–1998)

After the Victoria Theatre Company's relocation to the purpose-built New Vic Theatre in Newcastle-under-Lyme in 1986, Peter Cheeseman continued as its artistic director, maintaining leadership through the theatre's next phase. His tenure at the Victoria and New Vic Theatres spanned a total of 36 years, from the opening of the Victoria Theatre in 1962 until his retirement in 1998. During this directorship, Cheeseman personally directed more than 140 productions. Cheeseman retired from the New Vic in 1998 and was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) for his services to drama. In retirement, he chaired the National Council for Drama Training from 1997 until 2004. He served as honorary archivist for the Victoria Theatre Archive and oversaw its transfer on long-term loan to Staffordshire University in 2002, where it remains in the library’s Special Collections. Cheeseman also co-developed the Master of Fine Arts program in Theatre Directing at Birkbeck College, University of London, in collaboration with the National Council for Drama Training, with the course launching in 2004.

Theatrical innovations and approach

Advocacy for theatre-in-the-round

Peter Cheeseman is credited with establishing Britain's first permanent theatre-in-the-round through his leadership of dedicated venues. He demonstrated a lifelong commitment to arena staging, where the audience surrounds the performance area on all sides, breaking the traditional proscenium arch to foster greater intimacy and audience involvement. Under his leadership, the Victoria Theatre opened in Stoke-on-Trent on 9 October 1962 as Britain's first permanent theatre-in-the-round, adapted from a former cinema with 347 seats arranged around the acting space. Cheeseman passionately advocated for this configuration, arguing that ordinary audiences had long accepted similar surround arrangements in circuses and boxing rings, and that theatre-in-the-round created a more absorbing, realistic experience by placing spectators in close proximity to the action on all sides. After more than two decades of sustained effort, Cheeseman achieved his goal of a purpose-built venue when the New Vic Theatre opened in Newcastle-under-Lyme in 1986 as Europe's first purpose-built theatre-in-the-round, with 605 seats surrounding the stage. His early work drew influence from Stephen Joseph, whose Studio Theatre Company he joined in 1961 before establishing the permanent base at the Victoria Theatre.

Development of documentary and community-based theatre

Peter Cheeseman pioneered a distinctive form of documentary theatre at the Victoria Theatre in Stoke-on-Trent from the mid-1960s, relying on the meticulous collection and use of primary source material gathered through extensive tape-recorded interviews with local residents. This verbatim approach was directly inspired by Charles Parker's BBC Radio Ballads, which combined recordings of ordinary people's speech with folk song and music, and Parker's specific advice to Cheeseman—"Listen. Listen to people talking"—shaped his commitment to capturing authentic voices. Cheeseman's work centered on the industrial and social history of North Staffordshire, using audio-recorded testimony to explore community issues and preserve personal stories from the region's inhabitants. The Victoria Theatre's archive reflects this dedication, holding a large collection of such recordings that document the area's industrial heritage and lived experiences. These efforts aimed to instill a sense of pride and self-confidence in communities outside London, presenting their own histories and voices back to them as an act of democratic engagement. Cheeseman viewed theatre as a community public service, actively forging ties with local organisations including factories, schools, colleges, and community groups to ensure accessibility and relevance. His method involved scrupulous transcription and editing of recorded material, preserving the exact spoken words of interviewees while often incorporating music to provide emotional momentum. This practice, rooted in documentary traditions from radio and film, established a foundational model for verbatim theatre in Britain.

Notable productions

Major documentary works

Peter Cheeseman pioneered a distinctive form of musical documentary theatre at the Victoria Theatre in Stoke-on-Trent, where productions were collaboratively developed by the resident company using verbatim material from interviews, historical documents, and direct community input to explore the industrial and social history of North Staffordshire. These works combined authentic spoken dialogue with folk-style songs, often researched and compiled by actors and staff, to create theatre deeply rooted in local experience and concerns. The Jolly Potters, first performed in 1964, was an early and foundational musical documentary that examined the history of the Potteries ceramics industry and its people. Drawing on 1840s newspaper reports, historical speeches, Charles Shaw’s autobiography, and period songs, it addressed themes of industrialisation, the shift from rural to mechanised life, Chartism, poverty, and riots in the region. The production established Cheeseman's approach to documentary theatre and was restaged in 1992 with updated elements. The Knotty, premiered in 1966, chronicled the development, operation, and eventual closure of the North Staffordshire Railway, locally known as "the Knotty" after the Staffordshire Knot emblem. The piece incorporated material from newspapers, railway minutes, shareholder records, trade union documents, and extensive oral testimonies from former workers. It highlighted the railway's impact on the Potteries landscape and economy, and was selected to represent British theatre at the Florence International Theatre Festival in 1969. Fight for Shelton Bar, first staged in 1974, focused on the real-time campaign by the Shelton Works Action Committee to prevent British Steel Corporation's planned closure of steelmaking operations at Shelton Bar, a move that threatened 2,000 jobs and a significant rise in local unemployment. The production used over 100 hours of tape-recorded interviews with protagonists, Action Committee meetings, and workers inside the plant, with dialogue drawn exclusively from these sources and nightly updates reflecting ongoing developments. It received national media attention and is widely regarded as having contributed significantly to the campaign's success in preserving steelmaking at the site. Other group-created documentary works by Cheeseman and the company continued to address regional industrial and social themes, including coal mining, wartime experiences, local historical events, and community struggles, maintaining the emphasis on authentic voices from North Staffordshire across multiple productions.

Support for new writing and actors

Peter Cheeseman was a committed supporter of new writing during his long tenure at the Victoria Theatre, where he commissioned and produced original plays as a core part of the company's repertoire. In the theatre's early years, he actively sought out and developed new work, including commissioning 32 new plays in the 1960s alone from emerging and established writers. He collaborated extensively with Peter Terson, inviting the playwright to Stoke-on-Trent in 1963 after Terson submitted work following repeated rejections elsewhere, which led to the production of Terson's first play for the company in 1964 and his appointment as resident writer for three years under an Arts Council bursary. During that residency, Terson produced seven new plays, and he went on to contribute a total of 21 plays to the Victoria Theatre over the next two decades. Cheeseman also staged and directed early plays by Alan Ayckbourn, including Mr Whatnot in 1963, which marked Ayckbourn's transition to focusing more on writing and became the first of his works to transfer to London. Cheeseman provided formative early opportunities to several actors who later achieved prominence, with Ben Kingsley, Bob Hoskins, and Robert Powell among those who performed at the Victoria Theatre during its initial decades in the 1960s and 1970s. Director Mike Leigh joined the company in the 1960s as a writer and actor, an experience he later described as "a special and creative time" shaped by Cheeseman's emphasis on political and truthful theatre. Throughout his career, Cheeseman personally directed 147 productions, a substantial portion of which were new plays.

Awards and honours

Peter Cheeseman was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 1998 Birthday Honours for services to drama. In 2009, he received the Young Vic Award in recognition of his outstanding contribution to theatre-making in the UK and for a lifetime's encouragement and inspiration to a younger generation. Staffordshire University established the annual Peter Cheeseman lectures in his honour.

Death and legacy

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